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Hubble’s Law Plot distance vs. velocity. We find:

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1 Hubble’s Law Plot distance vs. velocity. We find:
Velocity proportional to distance H0 is called Hubble’s constant Best fit today (includes many assumptions): Uncertainties: Until recently, we didn’t know H0 very well, so we would write h =  0.014 I’ll probably avoid h. Many published documents write answers in terms of h so that we remove the uncertainty in H0

2 Distances from Hubble’s Law:
For almost any bright object, you can get red shift z: You can then get the velocity from Then use Hubble’s Law: A spectral line from a galaxy normally at nm appears instead at nm. How fast is the galaxy moving away from us? What is the distance to the galaxy?

3 Peculiar Velocities Hubble’s Law isn’t perfect: low z:
Not everything expands Galaxies, galaxy clusters, and smaller objects are not necessarily expanding Galaxy superclusters expand more slowly than Hubble’s Law implies Objects have extra velocities, called peculiar velocities Because gravity changes velocities Typically of order 500 km/s or so This causes errors, usually random of vp /H0 in the distance Typically 7 Mpc or so Poor distance indicator for distances under 50 Mpc or so. We also have our own peculiar velocity that needs to be compensated for We know how to do this

4 Failure of Hubble’s Law at High z:
Another reason it fails: high z: As z gets large (> 0.2) objects are moving relativistically Relativistic corrections Distance gets confusing as well We are also looking back into the past Bad: Expansion might not be constant Good: We can study the universe in the past (!) Still, higher z corresponds to greater distance If we can accurately measure distance to some high z objects, we can set up a calibration scale

5 The Cosmic Distance Ladder:
Radar Cepheid Variables Hubble’s Law Parallax Planetary Nebulas Moving Cluster Light Echo Type Ia Supernovae Spectroscopic Parallax Cluster Fitting 1 AU 1 10 100 1 10 100 1 10 100 1 10 pc Gpc kpc Mpc

6 Hubble Expansion Hubble’s Law can be thought of two ways:
All galaxies are flying apart from each other The space between the galaxies is expanding There is no special place in the universe It is meaningless to ask “where is it expanding from” All observers see the same thing

7 Age of the Universe: The naïve view:
Hubble’s Law tells us relation between distance and velocity We can therefore figure out how long ago all this stuff was here: Call t0 the time when everything left here: This time is called the inverse Hubble time: This is incorrect because the velocity of other galaxies is probably not constant Assuming gravity slows things down, should the actual age of the universe be grater than the inverse Hubble time, or less? Speeds are slowing down Speeds used to be greater Higher speed  Less time to get to where we are now

8 The Friedman Equation (1)
Assume the universe is homogenous and isotropic We can treat any point (us), as center of the universe We can use spherical symmetry around us Let a be the distance to any specific distant galaxy And let its mass be m By Gauss’s Law, gravitational force is easy to find Spherical symmetry tells us force is towards center And caused by only mass closer than that galaxy a distant galaxy us M Because expansion of the universe is uniform, stuff closer than galaxy always closer M is constant Multiply both sides by 2da/dt and integrate over time Don’t forget the constant of integration! We could call it k, for example For technical/historical reasons, it is called – kc2 This makes k dimensionless

9 The Friedmann Equation (2)
Mathematical notation: Time derivatives a distant galaxy us Divide both sides by a2 Rewrite first term on right in terms of mass density  M The resulting equation is called the First Friedman Equation The derivation was flawed M does not necessarily remain constant In relativity, other contributions to gravity The equation is correct, including relativity The left side is the square of Hubble’s constant Left side and first term on right independent of which galaxy you use We can pick a particular galaxy to make k bigger or smaller Normally chosen so that k = 0, +1, or -1

10 The Scale Factor The distance a is called the scale factor
All distances increase with the same ratio This applies to anything that is not bound together Even to waves of light! Red shift can be thought of as a stretching of universe Or is it Doppler shift? Either view is correct, there isn’t a right answer This view does give us another relationship: Early Universe a a0 Now Most common way to label something in the distant past: z Bigger z means earlier

11  We’d like to know which value of k is right Define the ratio:
If we know how big  is, we’ll know k It is common to break  into pieces Ordinary atoms and stuff: b Dark Matter: d Matter: m = d + b Radiation: r Etc.  changes with time When referring to values today, we add the subscript 0 Sometimes Dens. Curv. Name < 1 k = -1 Open = 1 k = 0 Flat > 1 k = +1 Closed

12 Curvature Dens. Curv. Name < 1 k = -1 Open = 1 k = 0 Flat
> 1 k = +1 Closed What’s the circumference of a circle of radius r? According to Einstein, Space time can be curved! Shape of space depends on density parameter:  If  = 1 then universe is flat and If  > 1 then universe is closed and If  < 1 then universe is open and Surface area of a sphere: A closed universe is finite

13 So, What is ? Stuff Cont. to  Stars 0.011 Gas, Dust 0.035
Neutrinos 10-4 – 10-2 Dark Matter  0.014 Light ~ 10-5 Total ~ 0.273 b =  As we will see, we have missed a substantial fraction of 

14 Age of the Universe, Round 2 (page 1)
What’s the current density of stuff in the universe? For ordinary matter, density  1/Volume Substitute in:

15 Age of the Universe, Round 2 (page 2)
Let x = a/a0 : If  = 0.273, then t0 = 11.4  0.3 Gyr If  = 1.000, then t0 = 9.3  0.2 Gyr These are younger than the oldest stars The Age Problem


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